[Vision2020] Hacker Tricks Yahoo, Gets Access to Palin's e-mails
lfalen
lfalen at turbonet.com
Mon Sep 22 10:22:34 PDT 2008
Right on
-----Original message-----
From: Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Date: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 14:37:50 -0700
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Hacker Tricks Yahoo, Gets Access to Palin's e-mails
> In my opinion, this hacker should be prosecuted to maximum extent of the
> law. If this hacker is not made an example of (since these exploits have
> been published nationally), hacking into people's private emails will be
> looked at as nothing more than a prank. BULL SH*T!
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> >From The Tennesseean at:
>
> http://tinyurl.com/443a3p
>
> -------------------------
>
> Hacker tricks Yahoo, gets access to Palin's e-mails
>
> Tenn. rep says blogs point finger at his son
>
> By TED BRIDIS
> Associated Press
>
> WASHINGTON — Details emerged Thursday behind the break-in of Republican
> vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin's e-mail account, including a
> first-hand account suggesting it was vulnerable because a hacker was able
> to impersonate her online to obtain access to the account.
>
> The hacker guessed that Alaska's governor had met her husband in high
> school, and knew Palin's date of birth and home ZIP code. Using those
> details, the hacker tricked Yahoo Inc.'s service into assigning a new
> password, "popcorn," for Palin's e-mail account, according to a chronology
> of the crime published on the Web site where the hacking was first
> revealed.
>
> The FBI and Secret Service launched a formal investigation Wednesday.
> Yahoo declined to comment Thursday on details of the investigation, citing
> Palin's privacy and the sensitivity of such investigations.
>
> The story took an unexpected turn Thursday, when Rep. Mike Kernell, a
> Memphis Democrat, confirmed that his son, a student at the University of
> Tennessee, was the person who was the subject of speculation on blogs on
> the subject.
>
> David Kernell is a student at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. Mike
> Kernell said he spoke to his son on Thursday, as he does on a regular
> basis.
>
> Kernell said he had no knowledge of an investigation or whether
> authorities contacted his son, though he said he had not personally been
> contacted by investigators.
>
> Kernell otherwise declined to comment, or discuss his son's whereabouts.
> Kernell's son did not respond to an e-mail request for comment.
>
> Action started as a prank
>
> The person who claimed responsibility for the break-in did not respond
> Thursday to an e-mail inquiry from The Associated Press.
>
> "i am the lurker who did it, and i would like to tell the story," the
> person wrote in the account on the Web site where the hacking was first
> revealed. What started as a prank was cut short because of panic over the
> possibility the FBI might investigate, the hacker wrote.
>
> Investigators were waiting to speak with Gabriel Ramuglia of Athens, Ga.,
> who operates an Internet anonymity service used by the hacker. Ramuglia
> said Thursday that he was reviewing his own logs and promised to turn over
> any helpful information to authorities because the hacker violated rules
> against using the anonymity service for illegal activities.
>
> "If you're doing something illegal and causing me issues by doing this,
> I'm willing to cooperate," Ramuglia said. "Obviously this is the most high
> profile situation I've dealt with."
>
> The break-in of Palin's private account is especially significant because
> Palin sometimes uses nongovernment e-mail to conduct state business.
> Previously disclosed e-mails indicate her administration embraced Yahoo
> accounts as an alternative to government e-mail, which could possibly be
> released under Alaska's Open Records Act.
>
> At the time, critics of Palin's administration were poring over official e-
> mails they had obtained from the governor's office looking for evidence of
> improper political activity.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Seeya at Farmers' Market, Moscow.
>
> Tom Hansen
> Moscow, Idaho
>
> "We're a town of about 23,000 with 10,000 college students. The college
> students are not very active in local elections (thank goodness!)."
>
> - Dale Courtney (March 28, 2007)
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> This message was sent by First Step Internet.
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>
>
>
>
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